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At the Museum of Fine Arts, the frothy ‘Fashioned by Sargent’ explores’ the artist’s painterly gifts and surface obsessions.
John Sargent is the only individual for whom the National Gallery has ever broken its rule against accepting the work of a living artist. Ihe gloomy, smoke-darkened pile facing Trafalgar Square ...
There have been countless retrospectives of portraitist John Singer Sargent, but now the 19th century painter is being shown in a brand new light.
American artist John Singer Sargent (1856–1925) arrived in Paris in 1874 as a talented and ambitious young man determined to make a name for himself. About a decade later, Sargent left Paris for ...
Like a swank ocean liner of a bygone era, the John Singer Sargent exhibition, "Sargent and Spain," at the Legion of Honor in San Francisco from the National Gallery in Washington, is a welcome arrival ...
<p>From the 1880's nearly until the start of World War I, by which point he had pretty much given up portraiture, John Singer Sargent was the most skillful society painter on either side of the ...
John Singer Sargent, Portrait of Lady Agnew (1882) on display at the Frick in 2014, loaned by the Photo: Michael Bodycomb. Courtesy: Scottish National Gallery in Edinburgh.
The great painter John Singer Sargent, an American expat, is the subject of a new show at Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts. It reveals much about his methods and why his work remains relevant more ...
1939: Tate Gallery Refuses Portrait by John Singer Sargent Highlights from the International Herald Tribune archives: In 1939, the Tate Gallery in London refuses a portrait of the Duke of Windsor ...
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